Kasukuwere angry over squatters on his farm - The Zimbabwe Mail thezimbabwemail.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from thezimbabwemail.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Zimbabwe War Veteran Says Mnangagwa, Top Zanu PF Officials Deployed Youth to Harass Me, Farm Workers
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Former Zipra combatant, Frederick Mutanda, who is among people and organizations that filed a court application opposing the extension of the term of office of the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, Luke Malaba, says some ruling party youth are camping at his farm in Mutorashanga, Mashonaland West province, accusing him of being antigovernment.
Mutanda claims that President Emmerson Mnangagwa and other top state and party officials are aware of what’s happening at his farm as the youth were given motorbikes by Zanu PF officials in Harare to travel to the province to intimidate and harass him.
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Some Zanu PF youth have invaded a Mashonaland West farm owned by war veteran, Frederick Mutanda, who challenged in court President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s extension of Luke Malaba’s term of office, according to an online publication, ZimLive.
ZimLive quoted Mutanda as saying 25 youth from Harare, using motorbikes and four vehicles, started camping at his Mutorashanga farm on Tuesday claiming that he is anti-government.
Two weeks ago, Mutanda, the Young Lawyers’ Association of Zimbabwe, Kika Musa of the Zimbabwe Human Rights NGO Forum and others sued the Judicial Service Commission and Attorney General when Mnangagwa extended Malaba’s term of office by five years.
Sex workers turn to technology for survival
BY LORRAINE MUROMO
THE COVID-19-induced lockdown may have brought many businesses to their knees, but innovation has kept others going and commercial sex workers have not been left out in embracing technology to eke a living.
Like other businesses, commercial sex workers turned to technology for survival in an environment where they could not go onto the streets to solicit for sex.
Since government had not recognised them as essential service providers, for Shylet Zigora, (not her real name), it was a case of “innovate or die”.
“It was a case of survival and there was little we could do, but to devise a new strategy.
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